Palestinians, Cairo said waiting on Jerusalem response to month-long truce offer; over 110 rockets shot at Israel Monday; family of slain 4-year-old says they won’t return to Gaza-area kibbutz

File. A trail of smoke is seen as a rocket is launched from the Gaza Strip toward the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon, August 24, 2014. (Edi Israel/Flash90, File)

Palestinian travelers wait before crossing into Egypt at the Rafah border crossing with Egypt in the southern Gaza Strip on August 25, 2014. (photo credit: AFP Photo/Said Khatib)

A Palestinian man sweeps the floor of his home that was damaged after a mosque across the street was hit by an Israeli airstrike on August 25, 2014 in Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip. (photo credit: AFP Photo/Roberto Schmidt)

A Palestinian man walks with a child past the rubble of a mosque that was partially damaged by an Israeli airstrike on August 25, 2014 in Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip. (photo credit: AFP/ROBERTO SCHMIDT)

Former president Shimon Peres with Doron and Gila Tragerman, the parents of 4-year-old Daniel, at Kibbutz Nahal Oz on August 24, 2014. Daniel was killed by a mortar shell fired from Gaza on August 22. (Photo credit: Flash90)

The family of Daniel Tragerman mourns during the funeral for the 4-year-old boy at the Hevel Shalom Cemetery in southern Israel, August 24, 2014 (photo credit: Hadas Parush/Flash90)

Daniel Tragerman, 4, seen during a visit at the presidential residence in Jerusalem in early August 2014. Daniel was killed by shrapnel from a mortar shell that hit his home in Kibbutz Nahal Oz on Friday, August 22, 2014. He was laid to rest on August 24. (Photo by Flash90)

A man injured by a mortar shell is rushed to the emergency room after arriving at Barzilai Hospital in Ashkelon on August 24, 2014. (photo credit: Edi Israel/Flash90)

Minister of Education Naftali Bennett (right), pictured with Shaar Hanegev Regional Council head Alon Shuster, at Kibbutz Kfar Aza, near the Israeli-Gaza Border on August 24, 2014. (Photo by Edi Israel/Flash90)

Writers

Ilan Ben Zion
Ilan Ben Zion is a news editor at The Times of Israel. He holds a Masters degree in Diplomacy from
… [More]Tel Aviv University and an Honors Bachelors degree from the University of Toronto in Near and Middle Eastern Civilizations, Jewish Studies, and English. [Less]

The Times of Israel liveblogged events as they unfolded through Monday, August 25, the 49th day of Operation Protective Edge. Hamas pounded southern Israel with about 110 rockets, and Israel hit back at targets in Gaza, all as unofficial truce talks reportedly gathered pace. (Tuesday’s liveblog is here.)

Day 49 of Operation Protective Edge

PREAMBLE: The 49th day of Israel’s conflict with Hamas began with a major barrage of rocket fire — bringing the number of rockets fired into Israel during Sunday to more than 130.

Earlier, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had said the operation would not end until Israel is safe from rocket fire and other Hamas attacks, and warned that the conflict might run on into the new school year, which starts next week.

Gila Tragerman, with husband Doron at her side, eulogizes her 4-year-old son Daniel at his funeral, August 24, 2014. Daniel was killed by shrapnel from a mortar shell fired from Gaza at his home at Kibbutz Nahal Oz on August 22. (Photo credit: Hadas Parush/Flash90)

On Sunday morning, 4-year-old Daniel Tragerman, killed by mortar fire from Gaza in his home at Kibbutz Nahal Oz, was laid to rest at a funeral attended by hundreds, including President Reuven Rivlin.

‘Abbas to ask UNSC to set date for Israeli withdrawal’

Late Sunday, PA officials said Mahmoud Abbas will ask the UN Security Council to set a deadline for Israel to withdraw from lands captured in 1967 to make way for a Palestinian state. If the council does not approve a resolution, they said, the Palestinians will then pursue war-crimes charges against Israel in the International Criminal Court.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity, because the plan has not been officially unveiled.

Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, left, greets Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas during his inauguration ceremony at the presidential palace in Cairo, Egypt, on June 8, 2014. (photo credit: AP/MENA)

Heartwrenching funeral; pledge from Netanyahu

Sunday was marked by the agonizing funeral of Daniel Tragerman, 4, killed when a mortar shell from Gaza sent shrapnel into his home at Kibbutz Nahal Oz before he could get to the family’s protected room.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu seen during a cabinet meeting in Tel Aviv on August 10, 2014. (Photo credit: Haim Zach/GPO/Flash90)

As hundreds attended his funeral, Netanyahu was giving a press conference at which he said to residents of Israel’s rocket-battered south: “We are with you, and we will stay with you until the quiet is restored, and afterward as well.”

Gaza terrorists target their own emergency crossing

On Sunday afternoon, the Erez crossing point into Israel was hit by a barrage of fire from Gaza. Several Israeli-Arab taxi drivers — whose job is transport Palestinians from Gaza for medical treatment in Israel — were hurt in the onslaught.

An outraged Israeli-Arab Erez crossing official, who spoke to Army Radio from a secured area at the crossing during a subsequent rocket attack, lambasted Hamas for not caring about the well-being of the Palestinians in Gaza.

A man injured by a mortar shell is rushed to the emergency room after arriving at Barzilai Hospital in Ashkelon on August 24, 2014. (photo credit: Edi Israel/Flash90)

“This is an organization that cares about the [Palestinian] people? They’re shooting at the Palestinian terminal,” said the staffer. He stressed that, despite the rocket barrages, the crossing had not closed for emergency medical cases, and that two Gaza females were evacuated “20 minutes ago” via the crossing for life-saving surgery in Israel, and that other taxi-drivers were on hand, “as always,” to transport emergency patients.

Hussein Abu-Einam, an eyewitness on the scene, told Army Radio: “The [drivers] sat in a shed and waited for the passengers and their relatives who were leaving Gaza for Israeli hospitals Ichilov and Tel Hashomer. Then seven shells fell — just one after the other. We didn’t have time to flee; it was a matter of a second.”

Six weeks into Operation Protective Edge, with global anti-Semitism said by some to be at unprecedented post-World War II levels, and dozens of Hollywood A-listers — from Penelope Cruz to Selena Gomez to even the Kabbalah-loving Madonna — all taking to the social media airwaves to decry Israel’s actions in Gaza, this petition was a major coup.

Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sylvester Stallone pose on the red carpet for the premiere of their movie “The Expendables 3” in Macau, China, Friday, Aug. 22, 2014. The two are among 187 signatories on a new letter slamming Hamas. (photo credit: AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

Behind the document, which also bears the names of Minnie Driver, Ziggy Marley, Mayim Bialik, Kelsey Grammer and Aaron Sorkin, is an organization called Creative Community for Peace — a defiantly pro-Israel gathering of industry insiders and eager volunteers who, together, have been fighting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement on the world’s glitziest, most celeb-obsessed stage.

Today, the group’s organizers say, there is not a single musical act, from Justin Timberlake to the Rolling Stones to Alicia Keys, that they have not approached and coached in advance of their performance in Israel.

Rocket sirens heard in Ashdod, Ashkelon, Hof Ashkelon

Two rockets hit the Eshkol region

Israel’s UN envoy: Qatar behind every rocket, every tunnel

In an opinion piece in the New York Times today, Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations Ron Prosor calls on the international community to stop Qatar’s funding of Hamas activities.

“Today, the petite petroleum kingdom is determined to buy its way to regional hegemony, and like other actors in the Middle East, it has used proxies to leverage influence and destabilize rivals,” Prosor writes.

Sirens in Yad Mordechai, Netiv Ha’asarah

Sirens in Ashkelon, Nitzanim

Palestinian flag-waving fan booted from UK stadium

A fan of the English Premier League soccer club Queens Park Rangers football club was thrown out of the White Hart Lane stadium Sunday after waving a Palestinian flag during a match with Tottenham Hotspur.

In a video of the incident, the man can be seen as he is escorted out of the stadium by security personnel, as the Spurs’ crowd — famous for their large Jewish following — chanted slogans against him.

Iron Dome downs rocket over Tel Aviv

Saudi Arabia pushing for truce — report

Turkish media reports that Saudi Arabia is pressing the Palestinians to accept the Egyptian proposal for a ceasefire. Saudi Arabia has assured the Palestinians that if nothing comes of the talks, it will see to it that the blockade is lifted through the opening of the Rafah crossing, it reports.

The Palestinian Ma’an News Agency reports that the Palestinian factions have accepted a new Egyptian proposal, and are waiting on Israel’s response. However, according to Al Jazeera, Hamas has rejected the call to return to negotiate with Israel.

Last night, Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal told Iranian TV the terror organization would not return to Cairo to broker a diplomatic solution to the conflict, and argued that “resistance” is the only way to get Israel to accept its demands.

49% of IDF recruits agree it’s ‘good to die for our country’

A Channel 2 poll conducted among Israeli teenagers, aged 17 and 18, who are set to be conscripted into the IDF shows that 49 percent identify with the statement “It is good to die for our country.”

Asked whether they agree with the statement, said to be the last words of Zionist war hero Joseph Trumpeldor, 23% say they strongly agree, while 26% say they mostly agree.

IDF soldiers hold up an Israeli flag as they ride in a tank along Israel’s border with the Gaza Strip, Friday, August 1, 2014. (photo credit: Albert Sadikov/Flash90)

The majority of respondents (61%) maintain that Operation Protective Edge has increased their motivation to join the army, with 29% say that the campaign has significantly boosted their motivation, and 32% saying it has moderately increased their resolve to enlist.

Nine percent say that the operation has made them less eager to join the military.

The poll was conducted by the Geocartography research institute, and had 307 participants.

Efforts increased to reach ceasefire — Hamas

Hamas senior official Osama Hamdan says the diplomatic initiatives to reach a ceasefire “have stepped up the pace,” Ynet reports, but does not indicate who is behind the increased truce efforts, or that an accord has been reached.

Rocket hits pool in Eshkol region; no injuries

Palestinian state won’t come from UN — Livni

Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, formerly a chief negotiator for the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, addresses the rumors that PA President Mahmoud Abbas will turn to the UN to set a deadline for Israel to withdraw to its pre-1967 borders and make way for a Palestinian state.

“He [Abbas] needs to understand that a Palestinian state will not come from the UN organizations. What can be obtained for the Palestinian nation, can be secured in the negotiating room,” she tells the Walla news website.

Livni calls for a “comprehensive political process,” and maintains that Abbas’s bid “raises the need for diplomatic negotiations” to reach a peace accord.

“The Palestinian nation very much loves resistance, so Abbas joined in — I assume he will try to make political moves,” she says.

Livni added that with regard to the current Cairo-brokered ceasefire, a truce that sees no lasting change is less than ideal.

“I opposed [Hamas] receiving a seaport and airport as a result of the attacks,” she says.

While Israel has no problem providing humanitarian aid and bettering the economic lives of Gaza’s residents, it wants to ensure that imported materials do not aid terror, she says. “Not money, not cement.”

“A ceasefire for some allotted period — if it has no change — from my perspective, is less good,” she says.

‘No new Egyptian initiative’ for truce — Hamas official

Addressing the rumors that an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire will be announced later today, Hamas official Moussa Abu Marzouk says “there is no new Egyptian initiative on the table for a ceasefire in Gaza,” according to Army Radio.

More details emerge on Abbas’s UN bid

As part of PA President Mahmoud Abbas’s rumored international bid, the Arab League is set to submit a UN petition for recognition of a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders which would call for “a swift end to the occupation,” Army Radio reports.

According to the report, this move would come in addition to Abbas’s demand for an internationally imposed deadline on Israel to evacuate the West Bank, which if rejected would see the PA leader filing war crimes charges against Israel at the International Criminal Court.

Should Abbas turn to the Security Council, he would likely be vetoed by the US, it reports, but if presented to the general assembly, the proposal would likely be met with a supportive majority.

Iran says it will arm West Bank Palestinians

Tehran will “accelerate” arming Palestinians in the West Bank in retaliation for Israel allegedly deploying a spy drone over Iran, which was shot down, a military commander says.

“We will accelerate the arming of the West Bank and we reserve the right to give any response,” says General Amir-Ali Hajizadeh, commander of aerial forces of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards, in a statement on their official website sepahnews.com.

The warning comes a day after the Guards claimed they had brought down an Israeli stealth drone above the Natanz uranium enrichment site in the center of the country.

Rocket hits Sdot Negev; no injuries

Truce draft said to outline four demands

According to an Al-Arabiya report, Egypt and the Palestinians are awaiting Israel’s response to a ceasefire proposal that is largely based on the 2012 Operation Pillar of Defense truce and the Egyptian draft.

It reports four central demands: the halting of hostilities on both sides, the lifting of the blockade and opening of border crossings, rebuilding the Gaza Strip, and extension of the fishing zone gradually to 6 and later 12 miles.

A defense official tells Walla news that the expansion of the fishing zone will only be implemented a month after the truce is declared, should it hold. Similarly, the Kerem Shalom crossing will gradually allow food and other necessities into the coastal enclave, and only later will permit the import of building materials.

Family of slain toddler won’t return to Nahal Oz

Gila Tragerman, the mother of the slain four-year-old Daniel Tragerman, says her family does not intend to return to their hometown of Nahal Oz on the Gaza border.

After the funeral yesterday, Tragerman tells Army Radio today, “it seems we will not return to Nahal Oz — there is no way.”

“Now it’s very clear, there are no more question marks and I don’t think there will be,” she says. “It’s not the quiet — it’s the memories,” she says of her decision.

Gila Tragerman, with husband Doron at her side, eulogizes her 4-year-old son Daniel at his funeral, August 24, 2014. Daniel was killed by shrapnel from a mortar shell fired from Gaza at his home at Kibbutz Nahal Oz on August 22. (Photo credit: Hadas Parush/Flash90)

Gila Tragerman describes her son as “a sweet boy” and says “the pictures that were publicized of him reflect who he really was.”

She says that during Operation Protective Edge, the family struggled to maintain a sense of normalcy. “Throughout the campaign we didn’t tell them we were leaving because of the operation, we only told them that there were Code Red [sirens] and that it was a little dangerous,” she says of her kids. “After about a month we told them the situation and they understood it.”

Tragerman describes the scene on Friday, when Daniel was killed by shrapnel in their Nahal Oz home. The family only had a three-second warning, she says, and did not reach the shelter in time.

“He left the tent right away, called his sister, and when I called him he stood there with a frozen look. I turned toward the shelter, and then I heard the shriek of the shrapnel and my husband’s scream. It’s just crazy, I have no words. I don’t think about ‘what would have happened if,’ I don’t want to go crazy [thinking about it],” she says.

Daniel Tragerman, 4, seen during a visit at the presidential residence in Jerusalem two weeks ago. Daniel was killed by shrapnel from a mortar shell that hit his home in Kibbutz Nahal Oz on Friday, August 22. He was laid to rest on August 24. (Photo by Flash90)

Nablus teen dies of wounds sustained at Gaza war rally

A Palestinian teenager wounded in clashes with the Israeli army three days ago died of his injuries on Monday, Palestinian medical and security sources say.

Hassan Ashur, 14, was shot in the abdomen with live fire as protesters clashed with Israeli troops at Beit Furik, near the northern West Bank city of Nablus, Palestinian sources tell AFP.

Ashur’s health rapidly deteriorated over the weekend, and he died Monday morning in hospital.

Israel’s army had no immediate comment on the incident.

A Palestinian protester runs away from Israeli soldiers during clashes, following a protest against Israeli military action in Gaza, in the West Bank city of Nablus on Friday, Aug. 22, 2014. (photo credit: AP/Nasser Ishtayeh)

Slain soldier’s family protests tombstone rules

The family of Staff Sergeant Lee Matt, who was killed during Operation Protective Edge, are petitioning the Defense Ministry to change the wording on his tombstone to include the names of his siblings.

Staff Sergeant Li Mat, 19, from Eilat (screen capture: Channel 2)

“This campaign is a public one. Since not all immediate family members are listed on tombstones, I decided that I have to do something,” says Lee’s father, Moti, at a ceremony at the Mount Herzl military cemetery commemorating the passage of one month since his son’s death.

The Matt family says that they did not want to disrupt the uniformity of the military cemetery by changing the size or type of the tombstone, but rather only to add to the standard text.

Lee’s sister Tal posted an animated video clip to Facebook Sunday titled “Let Me Die in Peace,” which describes the close-knit Matt family life and the petition to add the names of his three siblings to his tombstone in addition to those of his parents.

PA’s UN bid said to have wide support

PA President Mahmoud Abbas’s plan to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks through international means is backed by Europe and Russia, as well as Egypt, the Arab League, and Hamas, Palestinian sources tell Ynet.

The sources say that the plan to establish a Palestinian state, which Abbas is set to announce tomorrow, calls for international forces to man its future borders with Israel.

Truce efforts ‘still underway’ — Hamas

“Up until this moment, there is no definitive word about a ceasefire with Israel. Efforts are still underway to reach a deal,” he says.

Hours earlier, Palestinian sources told the news agency that all Palestinian representatives — including Hamas — accepted the terms of the new ceasefire proposal “without any reservations on the part of any of the Palestinian factions.”

Hamas claims it snatched Israeli drone

Press concerned about school year opening

The loss of a small child, and the possible loss of the beginning of the school year, both from Gazan terrorist aggression, make up the twin focuses of the Israeli press Monday morning.

While the tragedy of Daniel Tragerman’s death slowly fades from public view into the private and lonesome agony of his family, the possibility that continuing rocket fire could imperil the September 1 start of the school year across southern Israel — and even points closer to the heavily populated center of the country — rears up like an uninvited bull at a wedding.

If rockets stop, Cairo talks likely to resume — Peri

Science Minister Yaakov Peri, an observer at the security cabinet and former head of the Shin Bet internal security agency, says if the rocket fire stopped, it’s likely ceasefire talks will resume.

“If a ceasefire goes into effect, and it sticks, there is a good chance that the prime minister will instruct the delegation to return to the talks in Cairo,” he tells Israel Radio.

Science and Technology Minister Yaakov Peri, a former head of the Shin Bet. (Photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash 90)

“Generally, we will agree to open the crossings,” he says, referring to Erez and the Kerem Shalom commercial crossing where humanitarian aid passes.

Regarding the Rafah crossing with Egypt, “that is a decision for the Egyptians,” although Israel would support the deployment of Palestinian Authority security personnel at the terminal, he says, defining the broad outline of a limited arrangement.

But a more comprehensive arrangement — involving Israel facilitating the reconstruction of Gaza in exchange for its demilitarization — is “far off,” he says.

Three rockets fall in open areas in Hof Ashkelon

IDF says it targeted Shejaiya rocket launcher

The army says in a statement that it struck a rocket launcher used to fire projectiles at Israel earlier today.

The strike took place in Shejaiya, the site of some of heaviest fighting between Israel and Hamas during the ground offensive, and where Palestinian reports said today that three Gazans were killed by Israeli fire after their car was hit.

Condemnation for ‘collaborator’ executions

Human Rights Watch strongly denounces the Hamas executions of some 25 Palestinians accused of being collaborators with Israel.

“Amid all the carnage in Gaza, it’s abhorrent that Hamas officials are adding to it by permitting, if not ordering, the summary execution of Palestinians deemed to be collaborators,” says Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch, in a statement. “Hamas authorities need to stop these extrajudicial killings.”

Ashkelon mayor ditches meeting with minister in protest

Ashkelon Mayor Itamar Shimoni bails on a meeting with Education Minister Shai Piron and southern municipal leaders today in Beersheba in protest of Piron’s announcement that the school year will begin as scheduled despite the security situation, Ynet reports.

Shimoni says that the school year won’t start in Ashkelon so long as the rocket fire from the Gaza Strip continues. Ashkelon, the closest major Israeli city to the Palestinian territory, has been the target of regular rocket fire since Operation Protective Edge began.

IDF, Shin Bet confirm strike on car in Shejaiya

The army and the Shin Bet security agency confirm that they cooperated in the airstrike which targeted a vehicle carrying members of the Army of Islam. Palestinian sources say three people were killed in the strike on the car.

Intelligence sources tell Ynet that the Army of Islam operates under the aegis of Hamas in the Gaza Strip, and that the activists were engaged in prepping for an impending attack on Israel.

Sirens in Netivot, Sdot Negev region

Multiple sirens in Sha’ar Hanegev region

Sirens in Netivot

Rocket explodes near Netivot

At least one rocket reportedly hits an open area near the southern town of Netivot, causing no injuries or damage.

Kibbutz Nir Oz, the community where a 4-year-old was killed last week, is under heavy rocket fire and sirens are going off constantly in the kibbutz. There’s no immediate report of how many rockets targeted the community in the past several minutes.

16 rockets hit Sdot Negev region in 10 minutes

Ex-NY judge appointed to UN Gaza probe

The president of the United Nations’ top human rights body has appointed a former New York Supreme Court judge to serve as the third member of a commission investigating possible violations of the rules of war in Gaza.

Gabon Ambassador Baudelaire Ndong Ella, who presides over the UN’s 47-nation Human Rights Council, said Monday that Mary McGowan Davis will join William Schabas and Doudou Diene on the commission created by the council’s July 23 resolution.

Davis, who also was a federal prosecutor and has previous UN experience related to Gaza, will take the place of British-Lebanese lawyer Amal Alamuddin. Alamuddin, who is engaged to marry George Clooney, said she could not accept the role shortly after she had been appointed to it.

IDF says it’ll hit school where rockets were fired

The IDF has warned that it will strike the school in Zeitoun, a neighborhood of Gaza City, from which the rocket that killed 4-year-old Daniel Tragerman was fired. It calls on refugees taking shelter in the structure to leave immediately.

According to the IDF, it has struck 70 targets in the Gaza Strip since midnight. Over 120 rockets have been fired into Israel in the same span of time.

Sirens in area near Ben Gurion Airport

Sirens in southern Tel Aviv suburbs

Plane landing at Ben Gurion loops back as sirens wail

A plane landing at Ben-Gurion International Airport calls off its descent as sirens sound in the towns surrounding the airport. The El Al flight from Rhodes to Tel Aviv turned north and looped back over the Mediterranean.

One rocket was intercepted over the Greater Tel Aviv area shortly thereafter.

El Al flight from Rhodes to Tel Aviv calls off landing at Ben Gurion Airport on Monday evening as sirens wail near the airport, August 25, 2014. (screen capture: FlightRadar24)

Horovitz on ‘Daniel Tragerman’s war’

“The killing of Daniel Tragerman, his pure small life extinguished by pure evil, underlines what we are up against, and what we insistently strive for,” ToI’s Editor David Horovitz writes in an op-ed.

Daniel Tragerman, 4, seen during a visit to the presidential residence in Jerusalem in early August. Daniel was killed by shrapnel from a mortar shell that hit his home in Kibbutz Nahal Oz on Friday, August 22. He was laid to rest on August 24. (photo credit: Flash90)

“As we have done since 1948, to quote from our Declaration of Independence, ‘we extend our hand to all neighboring states and their peoples in an offer of peace and good neighborliness, and appeal to them to establish bonds of cooperation and mutual help with the sovereign Jewish people settled in its own land.’ Those words apply as well to Abbas, the Palestinian leader now reportedly planning his latest UN gambit to try to impose his terms for Palestinian statehood.”

Horovitz continues: “Were Abbas to abandon his obscene government partnership with Hamas, condemn Hamas for the vicious murder machine it is, and commit himself to leading his embittered people — indoctrinated and poisoned by decades of false narratives — toward recognition of the Jewish nation’s legitimacy, he would have no need to attempt diplomatic extortion.”

Hamas claims responsibility for firing an M-75 rocket at the Greater Tel Aviv area just before 8 p.m. The rocket was intercepted by the Iron Dome missile-defense system.

Meanwhile, Israeli and Palestinian delegates are reportedly working toward a new truce deal; Channel 2’s Ehud Ya’ari quotes an Islamic Jihad official in Cairo saying all Palestinian factions want a ceasefire.

Israel is also coordinating with the United States about a possible Security Council resolution to bring a halt to the fighting in the Gaza Strip, Channel 2 reports.

Second IDF ground invasion ‘valueless,’ Palestinian groups say

Israel wouldn’t dare launch another ground invasion of the Gaza Strip, because Palestinian fighters “rubbed the nose of their so-called elite brigades in the dirt in Gaza,” the Palestinian Ma’an news agency quotes Gaza’s Popular Resistance Committees as saying on Monday.

Another group, the al-Mujahideen Brigades, call Israel’s vow to renew the ground battle in Gaza “valueless.”

Truce deal possible tonight, Egyptian official says

Poll shows massive drop in Netanyahu ratings

A series of public-opinion polls broadcast Monday find a massive drop in support for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The surveys, conducted by Shiluv Millward Brown and published on Channel 2, show that in the past month Netanyahu’s approval rating has dropped from 82 percent to 38% in the past month, and by 17% in the past four days alone.

The size of the surveyed population, or the questions asked, were not detailed in the Channel 2 segment, and the statistics were not immediately available on the website of Shiluv Millward Brown.

Concerning the impending beginning of the school year, 63% of those polled voiced opposition to the opening of schools in southern Israel. Sixty-eight percent also say the government’s treatment of the south has been unsatisfactory.

Three injured in rock throwing in Jerusalem

Police say three children were lightly injured after rocks were thrown at a car in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Wadi al-Joz. A 22-year-old masked man was arrested by police and Border Police while throwing rocks.

IDF returns fire into Lebanon

The IDF confirms that two rockets were fired into Israel from Lebanon and that it has retaliated with artillery fire at the source of the attack.

According to Lebanese news outlet MTV, Israeli planes are flying over the southern Lebanon towns of Nabatieh and Jormok, after the rockets were reportedly fired from the latter town. Lebanese army forces are en route to the launch site, Lebanon’s government news outlet says.

MTV correspondent: Israeli Air Force flying over al-Nabatiyeh and Jormok in South Lebanon

Truce efforts advancing, end of hostilities essential, Hamas says

Hamas spokesperson Sami Abu Zuhri says the Islamist group concedes that there are contacts to reach a truce between Israel and the Palestinian factions and that “the efforts are advancing more than in the past, but we haven’t received a concrete response from Israel.”

“We’re prepared to discuss at a later stage the various controversial issues: the sea port, the prisoners and the airport,” he says. “What’s important at this stage is ending the Israeli aggression, opening the crossings and rebuilding the Strip.”

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